(Corrects base year for China's Paris agreement carbon intensity target to 2005, not 2026, in paragraph 2) By Colleen Howe ...
The most comprehensive study of China’s role in the global energy transition shows a significant shift to renewables.
The ongoing conflict in the Middle East has affected China's energy security, prompting a reassessment. Read more at ...
China’s expanding coal-to-liquids (CTL) and coal-to-chemicals (CTC) sectors explain the divergence between rising coal output and declining power-sector consumption, exports and shrinking stocks ...
China's operating power capacity from non-fossil fuel sources, including solar, wind, nuclear, and hydropower, has surpassed its fossil fuel-based capacity for the first time, reaching 52% of the ...
Often compared with MIT or Stanford, Tsinghua is widely viewed as China's top engineering university and a key pipeline for talent entering the country's tech and industrial giants.
Rising electricity and CHP heating demand drives ongoing coal construction. China is expected to continue building coal-fired power plants through the end of the decade, even as it pursues aggressive ...
Oil and gas price shocks triggered by conflict reignite discussion about building defences to volatile fuel costs ...
The global energy transition and the continuous expansion of oil and gas infrastructure place unprecedented demands on ...